At first glance, it looks like a simple question—four glasses, all filled to what seems like the same level. But something feels off the longer you look. Each glass holds a different object, and suddenly it’s not just about what you see, but what you understand. Most people rush to answer based on height, assuming the fullest-looking glass must have more water. But this isn’t about appearances. It’s about what’s hidden beneath the surface.
Glass A has a paperclip, small and almost insignificant. Glass B holds a baseball, large and taking up obvious space. Glass C has an eraser, somewhere in between, while Glass D contains a watch, oddly shaped and misleading at first glance. The trick isn’t guessing which looks fullest—it’s realizing that objects displace water. The bigger the object inside, the less actual water the glass can hold, even if the level looks the same.
That’s where most people get it wrong. They focus on the surface instead of the volume. The baseball in Glass B pushes out a lot of water, meaning there’s actually less water inside compared to the others. The eraser and watch do the same, each displacing their own amount. But the paperclip in Glass A barely takes up any space at all. It sinks quietly, leaving almost the entire glass filled with water.
Once you see it, the answer becomes obvious. Glass A contains the most water, not because it looks different, but because it hides the least amount of displacement. It’s a quiet detail, easy to overlook if you’re rushing or relying only on what your eyes tell you at first glance. This is exactly why the question works—it forces you to think beyond what seems obvious.
And that’s where the “giver or taker” idea comes in. Some people focus on surface impressions, while others look deeper, questioning what’s really happening underneath. The right answer isn’t about guessing—it’s about understanding. And sometimes, the smallest detail reveals the biggest truth.